Focus areas

Group objectives

  • Market-leading positions on specific major European transport corridors
  • Resilient, competitive and predictable intermodal offerings to a growing customer base
  • Ensuring efficient and competitive rail traction capacity with a balanced portfolio of strategic partners
  • Digital transformation and automation in planning and operations along the intermodal chain, including customers, railway undertakings and third party terminals
  • R&D: continuous development of innovations in wagon technology and terminals
  • Increasing the productivity of intermodal and terminal operations

Market development

  • Focus on the intermodal transport segments of transalpine, long haul (over 600 km in Europe) and maritime transport
  • 30-50% market share on the corridors served
  • Focus on pipeline development with 5-10 and more roundtrips per week
  • Capacity utilisation of trains above 80%
  • Priority on the use of own terminals
  • Strengthening the main transport corridors by investing in terminals

Customers

  • Quality, reliability, stability, cost leadership and competitiveness are the key drivers
  • Automate the contract-to-cash process
  • Standardise digital services and set up a self-service platform for customers
  • ‘Estimated pick-up time’ information for 100% of shipments, with 95% reliability
  • Expand customer base; service for major customers
 

Partners

  • Integrate the planning cycle with strategic partners

  • Establish strong partnerships with multiple rail operators
  • Standardise and automate the purchase-to-payment process with partners
  • Strengthen the digitalisation of operational processes (timetables, disruptions, pick-up times, etc.)
 

Employees

  • Develop young talents into leadership positions
  • Increase the diversity of the workforce, particularly in leadership and management positions
  • Reduce staff turnover in the Group
  • HR leadership development program for 2nd/3rd level managers

Contact

New multimodal terminal (road-rail) in the harbour of Antwerp takes 150.000 trucks off the road

An initiative of BASF, Hupac and IFB

Investment of circa 29 million euro with support from Flemish Government and European Regional Development Fund (EFRO)

 

10 kilometres less traffic-jam a day and CO2 reduction with at least 30.000 ton/year

 

At least 40 new logistic jobs

 

Today, 10 March 2009, the works symbolically started for the building of a new multimodal terminal (rail-road) that will be operational in 2010, in the northern part of the harbour of Antwerp, on the grounds of BASF Antwerp. Flemish Prime Minister Kris Peeters and vice- Prime Minister Dirk Van Mechelen underscored with their presence the importance of this new multimodal terminal in the harbour of Antwerp.

 

The multimodal terminal is an initiative of the largest chemical establishment, BASF Antwerp NV, of the Swiss intermodal operator Hupac and of IFB, a subsidiary company of the NMBS. It concerns an investment of nearly 29 million euro, and at least 40 logistic jobs will be created. The operations of the terminal will be outsourced to an external operator for which the bidding is active at the moment.

 

With this new multimodal terminal, the partners want to anticipate a shortage of intermodal rail infrastructure in the harbour of Antwerp. With the multimodal terminal they want to avoid an impending congestion on the road. At the same time the transport costs and the environmental impact are reduced, and the transport safety is increased.

 

The new terminal, a joint venture that received the name Combinant NV, will bring yearly over 150.000 container transfers from the road to the rail. That is a daily saving of 10 kilometres traffic jam and a yearly reduction of as much as 30.000 ton CO2 emissions.

 

The multimodal terminal – that is open for third parties – will take the container transport off the road and bring it by composite trains to the hinterland. It is going to be a new platform in the European logistic network and will anticipate the impending traffic black spot in and around the harbour of Antwerp. Because of the location, the new multimodal terminal is easy accessible for container transport from the harbour of Antwerp and from the North of the Netherlands.

 

Because of the strategic location, the teamwork between several partners and the accessibility of the terminal for third parties, the project received also support from the Flemish government and the European Regional Development Fund (EFRO). The support of Flanders and Europe consists about 30% of the investment costs.

 

The terminal itself has a surface area of 1 km on 100 m (circa 20 football fields), 5 train rails, 3 large portal cranes and can handle from 10 to 12 trains a day. All kind of containers, delivered by both private and public carriers, will be handled.

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